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4. Steps That Work and Those That Don’t

On May 3, 2011, CPJ representatives traveled to Pakistan to raise concerns about the increasing attacks against journalists there and the country’s high rate of impunity. It was a moment of drama: The previous day, American forces had killed Osama bin Laden in nearby Abbottabad. But Pakistani President Asif Ali Zardari kept his commitment and met CPJ to discuss the growing number of Pakistani journalists murdered because of their work, and the absence of prosecution against the assailants.

Nairobi, October 22,
2013--Somali authorities must work quickly to identify the motive in today's
murder attempt on a broadcast reporter and bring the perpetrators to justice,
the Committee to Protect Journalists said today. The journalist, Mohamed
Mohamud, has been hospitalized with serious injuries.

Dear Prime Minister Cameron: You recently spoke out in defense of press freedom in Africa by raising the case of an imprisoned Somali journalist when you met with Somali President Hassan Sheikh Mohamud. The journalist was subsequently released. The moral authority of a British prime minister to mount such a defense stems in part from Britain's history of nearly 300 years without government regulation of the press.

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Nairobi, February 5,
2013--The Committee to Protect Journalists condemns the conviction and prison
sentence handed down today against a Somali freelance journalist charged with
insulting the government by interviewing a woman who said she was raped by
government forces. CPJ calls for the sentence to be overturned and for reporter
Abdiaziz Abdinuur to be released immediately pending appeal.

Dear President Hassan Sheikh Mohamud: We are writing to express our concern about a Somali journalist who has been imprisoned since January 10 for interviewing a woman who claimed she was raped by government soldiers. We are also concerned by recent statements you made in Washington indicating your administration will not tolerate negative coverage by the local press. We urge you to ensure the journalist is released immediately and to follow up on your commitment to create a task force to investigate Somalia's unsolved journalist murders.

In October, two gunmen shot Shabelle Media Network
reporter Mohamed
Mohamud as he left a mosque one evening; he died
from the gunshot wounds less than one week later. Several members of the Somali
armed forces who happened to be at the scene opened fire on his assailants,
local journalists said, but Mohamed's killers have still not been identified.